Stichting Nepal (SN) and The Nepal Trust (the NT) have both been working in Nepal on
humanitarian and community development projects for many years. They have successfully
collaborated on a number of projects and programmes under the terms of a formal
collaboration agreement; these have established that they are comfortable “bed fellows”.

Both have high ethical standards and refuse to be drawn into the corruption that pervades the
donor world in Nepal and in particular around Kathmandu; both are run by European
volunteers who give their time freely and where possible either cover their own costs
personally or seek get such costs sponsored; both are focused on Nepal and not the wider third
world; both are primarily focused on education and healthcare; both believe in community
engagement and community empowerment and shun handout mentality. For both the target is
that every amount raised from donors should be an amount spent in Nepal.

Mission Statement

Our mission is to improve the living conditions and future perspectives of children and other
vulnerable members of society in Nepal, by improving their access to education, health care
and economic independence.

We operate from a vision on society where equal opportunity in education and health care are
paramount. Our programmes are targeted towards a sustainable cooperation that results in the
self-reliance of individuals and institutions. We use our knowledge, contacts and experience
to gather the funding for individual children and their schools, patients and their clinicians.
This cross-sectorial approach has led to over 200 self-reliant projects with a profound impact
in local society. Our projects are all subject of close cooperation with the local communities.

Objectives

To cooperate more closely together and with others as organisations over the long term on
fund raising, the selection of projects and programmes, the on-going support and sustainment
of projects and the promotion of our work.

To broaden the international base of support for our work in Nepal and ensure its
sustainability for the long term by inviting organisation with the same goals to join with us.

To be a partner for the Nepali government (working with the Social Welfare Council).

To be a partner for the government in the country of origin of each INA member.

Status

The NT and SN are the founding members of the International Nepal Alliance (INA). The
boards of both organisations, as well as the advisory board of SN are behind this endeavour
100%.

Approach

An international, umbrella organisation ‘International Nepal Alliance’ (INA) has been created
through which the two founding organisations will coordinate projects together, with the
purpose of creating a “clean” delivery arm for the implementation and running of projects and
programmes in Nepal, effectively making more out of each donation. The doors of the INA
would be open to other organisations that share the ethos and values of the founding
organisations and wish to use the INA delivery arm for the delivery and execution of projects
and programmes

Thus the “signatories” to the INA will be organisations operating outside Nepal who are
committed to supporting projects and programmes that are organised and executed through
the INA delivery team and who are willing to work collectively to raise funds for projects in
Nepal of mutual interest to be developed working through the INA delivery team in Nepal.
Organisations inside Nepal will also join the INA as local partners. They will be working as
contractors to INA projects.

The INA will not be registered in its own name as a charity.

The INA delivery team will be the NT INGO under Jeroen van den Bergh, operating at local
level through the NT Not For Profit Limited Company (NPC) Nepal Development Foundation
(NDF). In more detail the plan is that the NT INGO would be the execution arm for the INA
and has entered into a project agreement with the SWC “on behalf” of the INA. For this to be
effective the projects and programmes agreed by the INA as the ones it would work on, would
be registered with the SWC by NDF and money raised for these projects and programmes by
individual INA members would be routed into Nepal through the NT INGO.

Under this model the INA members will retain their identities but at the same time enter into a
formal agreement defining how they will collaborate and the rules of engagement and conduct
to which all organisations will subscribe and be bound by. Once established all other
organisations that join the INA in the future would be required to accept the rules and way of
working of the INA but at the same time would be required to continue to abide by the rules
and legal requirements of a charity working in their country.